Galactic Cowboys: The One That Got Away

By Anthony Castellitto (who has impeccable taste in music)

4744_Galactic Cowboys

When I converted to Christianity it became apparent that I could not reconcile my faith in God with my musical listening tendencies.  I soon found myself sorting through my compact disc collection and discarding those which I deemed incompatible with my Christian worldview.  With the exception of a few U2 albums, my complete collection, predominantly comprised of high profile hard rock selections from the eighties and nineties, had been completely purged.

I eventually discovered the Christian rock scene and uncovered a few hidden (at least from me) gems that helped fill my hard rock void.  However, for the most part I was disappointed with what I perceived to be a lack of musical, lyrical and surprisingly spiritual depth in this music I had been exploring.

It wasn’t till I rediscovered a dusty old misplaced cassette tape that my interest in music started to become fully renewed.  The name of that tape, ‘Faith Hope Love’ by King’ X.

When it was first released I didn’t really get it.  The music was heavy, but it was weird.  It just didn’t fully register with me…..too artsy, too melodic, too ambitious.

And the lyrics?  The words spoke of spiritual struggles and transcending love with an eye towards eternal redemption.  Definitely a far cry from the party anthems and calls to rebellion, which were the standard lyrical themes that I associated with the hard rock genre.

To their credit, King’s X did receive a fair amount of notoriety over the years and have been hailed as a major influence on the likes of pearl jam, alice in chains, and the whole grunge movement of the early nineties.  As I searched through their rich catalog I came across another group, Galactic Cowboys (never heard of them? neither had I) who had also emerged from the small yet noteworthy Christian metal scene along with King’s X in the early nineties.

I immediately got my hands on their first two major label releases.  It was evident, to me anyway, that Galactic Cowboys were a band destined for greatness.  Unfortunately their promise was derailed before the train even left the station when after being signed to Geffen they were immediately tossed aside as label mates Nirvana exploded onto the rock scene.  The future course of these two promising young bands would forever be altered.  Nirvana’s emergence transformed the musical landscape even though the band prematurely imploded while the Cowboys, despite their unique and intriguing blend of styles, quickly faded away into obscurity.

We all know about Nirvana….rebellious, cynical, raw, angry and unpredictable.  While Galactic Cowboys, although similar in terms of hooks, melodies and harmonies were polished, disciplined, witty and colorful.  The Cowboys hard rock aggression were a nod to the mighty thrash of Metallica rather than the stripped down simplicity of the punk movement (despite the fact that bassist and primary songwriter Monty Colvin is the cousin of the late bassist and primary songwriter Douglas Colvin a.k.a. “De De Ramone” whose band was an early forerunner of Nirvana).

Galactic Cowboys were not a Christian band (although maybe they would have met with greater success if they were marketed thus) but a band full of Christians who were not afraid to wave the flag for Christian morality.  Heck, this is a band that recorded three candid, unapologetic anti-abortion songs (two released as singles) for their first two albums with Geffen.  The diverse lyrical themes of their music covered a vast array of social and spiritual topics including poverty, isolation, hard-heartedness and environmental protection against the likes of Exxon Valdez.  The band could have and should have been huge.  They are a criminally overlooked band that blended the layered-harmonies and melodies of classic Chicago with the bone crushing riffs of old school Metallica.  In one song they can go from rocking your face off to seducing you with a sweet harmony or heartfelt lyric while thinking nothing of integrating acoustic guitars or blues harp into a musical mix grounded in heavy metal.

On their last album, 2000’s unpromoted ‘Let It Go’ the group expanded its social commentaries to include the loss of innocence, teen angst, the gun culture and the glorification of violence in the media.  And on this release more than any other the band was not afraid to express their dependency on Jesus Christ to get through this life and remain grounded in eternal truths over temporal riches that ultimately fade.  Unfortunately the Cowboys did fade immediately following this release and despite a few reunion shows in 2009 have remained inactive and relatively unknown.

Do yourself a favor and check out this great band!  A band of great promise………the one that got away!

galacpop

And here’s a related article: HM archives

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17 Comments

  1. Kevin had this to say on January 21, 2012 | Permalink

    Thanks for bringing back great memories. I loved this band and discovered them through reading about them in HM back in the 90s. They were sorely overlooked, as you said.

    Still wish they would record again, because at the time each release was better then the last. I understood why they broke up but still they were on a roll at the time.

    Liked them so much I tracked down a copy of The Awful Truth.

  2. Tim Taylor had this to say on January 22, 2012 | Permalink

    Galactic Cowboys never age!

  3. Brian had this to say on January 22, 2012 | Permalink

    great band! i miss those guys…

  4. ben had this to say on January 23, 2012 | Permalink

    Funny to see them described as unknowns. I have all their CDs. One of my favorite bands period. My only regret is that I never got to see them play live.

  5. inluvwithwords had this to say on January 24, 2012 | Permalink

    Great article. I’m going to have to look them up.

  6. Jenn had this to say on January 26, 2012 | Permalink

    An amazing band and very underrated. Machine Fish, At The End of the Day and Let It Go were my favorites!!

  7. AC had this to say on January 26, 2012 | Permalink

    Looks like now the Beatles weren’t so bad
    Mr. Manson makes the Four look fab
    ‘Cause death and evil is what sells today
    And Walter Disney’s spinning in his grave.

    Grandpa’s Woodstock acid wasn’t brown
    President lit up and passed it down
    The days of outrage have all gone away
    I bet that Disney’s spinning in his grave.

    Remember back to days when
    Kids were kids and it was fun
    And the kids didn’t carry guns
    While we were pleasure hunting
    We got tricked like Elmer Fudd
    Brainwashed by the media.

    Inconvenienced by a small mistake
    Mother chooses to exterminate
    I wonder what the forefathers would say
    The land of the free, home of the depraved
    I bet that Disney’s spinning round
    I bet that Disney’s spinning
    I bet that Disney’s spinning in his grave.

  8. AC had this to say on January 27, 2012 | Permalink

    My question/request for clarification to the Editor:

    I was wondering if you can clarify something for me….I thought GC’s ‘If I was A Killer’, ‘I’m Not Amused’ & ‘Kill Floor’ were all anti-abortion songs…….

    I’ve been told ‘Kill Floor’ is not, merely dealing with a guy in a slaughterhouse who goes mad (I still thought there may have been a double meaning there???)

    how about ‘I’m Not Amused’, is that song about abortion? I know ‘If I Was A Killer’ is…..

    From HM Editor Doug Van Pelt:

    I cannot speak for the band, nor should any of us fans ever presume to “know” what the writer is talking about. Using my insight and memories from interviewing the band and reading press releases, I will comment below:
    i’m not amused was written about the occult/ritualistic killings in Matamorus, Mexico in the late 89 or 1990 time period. These might have been satanic murders or even someone “dabbling” in the occult like some adolescent experimentation or game, but lives were lost and the writer of the song “was not amused.”

    The other two you are right. Written so as to be openly interpreted (multiple meanings), but no doubt written from a pro-life heart. Just coyly and never presented as such (and thus reaching more people and getting past the biased filters that exist in the media and entertainment world).

    I remember seeing the Galactic Cowboys at a panel at the Foundations Forum convention, along with members of Fear Factory, King’s X and others, (right after a guy from the Jim Rose circus, maybe Jim himself, doing tricks with his genitals onstage as “entertainment”). It was ‘96, i think, and an election year. Someone asked Ben Huggins what his policital bent or preference was and he answered,

    “I don’t think here cares.”

    While some might say that’s fearful, chicken or whatever, I think it’s smart to pick and choose your battles. If all of us went around and told everyone who would listen all of our opinions on everything, we’d all end up sequestered and cornered off in our own little worlds, little groups of like-minded people who never thought, debated or interacted with anyone else in another “camp.” I bet you $10 that Ben would have stated “Republican” in 1996 and that would have made people that might listen to his band immediately “boo” and turn their listening habits away from the band forever.

    I remember seeing Michael Stipe at an awards show (GRAMMYS, maybe, maybe something to do with MTV, i don’t remember) and R.E.M. won an award and he took off a t-shirt that said this (maybe GUn Control) and that, and then another and then another and i think the last one was PRO CHOICE. I still hold that against him to this day (and that was probably 20 years ago). It’s hard for me to like him, because I instantly formed an opinion of him as being a liberally-caused/play-to-the-popular-crowd political guy. That’s not fair to REM’s music that I do that, but I have this bias against the band now and that kind of keeps me from enjoying the music they make. I’m being honest (and vulnerable, like an idiot that wants people to attack him) here. People like me can be dumb. That’s why a lot of Christian rock never gets heard. The people that control the flow of media have a pre-conceived notion that “this song is going to be about this, ‘Accept Jesus as your personal Savior or else’ message, or a pro-Republican message or an anti-gay message or an anti-abortion message’ (try to get a media person to say “pro-life” instead of “anti-abortion” they won’t do it). When we reveal our cards in the great poker game of life, there’s no taking it back. There’s wisdom in hiding your cards, people.

    If you’re on the front lines and you’ve revealed all your cards, you’ll resent me for saying this, because it might keep people from joining your cause. I’m sorry, but I think this is true. I think Jesus kept His mouth shut at certain times. That’s right, He didn’t even tell people He was the Messiah or the Living Son of God sometimes. Are we going to attack Him and call Him a chicken for not standing up for the truth? He IS the Truth. Check out the book of Esther. Hiding your cards doesn’t mean you don’t lay ‘em down in the last hand. She waited “for such a time as this” and laid ‘em all out … and saved a nation. I’m not promoting cowardice or muting our voices for all eternity. But, like the preaching of grace, if you don’t give license to sin and abuse it, you’re probably not really preaching real grace.

    Wisdom is not stupidity, but it can be perceived as such (or as cowardice).

    I must apologize to AC for making this a blog, but it just happened.
    :)

  9. JoeGTO had this to say on January 31, 2012 | Permalink

    A favorite band! Melodic metal with meaning! You must watch their “Evil Twin” video on Youtube

  10. C. Todd Barnes had this to say on January 31, 2012 | Permalink

    I think there’s definite wisdom in that, Doug. Thanks for sharing! I appreciate you. -Todd in SoCal

  11. Jeffrey Elliott had this to say on January 31, 2012 | Permalink

    I have been a GC fan since hearing them when cassettes where the rage. (Pre-CD era). They have a fitting name as they are from the Houston area by NASA.. Monty Colvin is a bass player like no other and he is a professional artist and did all of the artwork for their albums. (Class Act). He has perfected a bass tone that I like to call “Flunchy” that fits the music perfectly. I think that their harmonies are just as good if not better that anyone out there as Ben Huggins has an incredible voice and the band backs him well. Alan Doss is just a ragin beater and perfect live. Wally Farkas guitar work is phenominal. Galactic Cowboys should be in the Hall Of Fame in my book. Ben, please come to Beaumont,Tx and bring the boys, Dinner is my treat.

  12. KCUZ had this to say on February 1, 2012 | Permalink

    The fact that we’re all still out there talking about GC and touting their tunes just goes to show you they always ‘had it’. Truly unique music that I still love to this day. I was totally blessed and lucky to see them play alongside King’s X in Dallas in the late 90s, shortly before ‘Let it Go’. It’ll always be a concert highlight . . . ‘Someone for Everyone’ was paired with a slideshow at our wedding of my wife and I growing up side by side . . . Thanks Monty, Ben, Alan, and Wally, for being there for us through the years. We’d all be up for some new tunes anytime, too!

  13. KCUZ had this to say on February 1, 2012 | Permalink

    Also, as has been mentioned, many who love GC found them thru King’s X, or vice versa. I also saw ‘Awful Truth’, Monty’s pre-GC band mentioned. For those wanting more, be sure to go to Monty Colvin’s site to check out his most recent project, Crunchy. Also, try to find ‘Tellus’, a band whose initial album was produced by Alan Doss, with that great Texas hard rock sound. The husband/wife band re-emerged recently as ‘Galea’, with Doss back, this time on drums . . . All are worth a listen . . .

  14. David E had this to say on February 1, 2012 | Permalink

    I saw them three times in 1991 (or was it 1992?) when they played the Marquee in London and supported King’s X on the Faith, Hope, Love tour. Easily the best combination of bands I’ve ever seen!

    Their albums were pretty awesome too, my favourite is ‘At The End Of The Day’. It’s a great shame they were so overlooked, it seems from their website that some of them aren’t even in the music business any more, what a shame!

  15. glen had this to say on February 1, 2012 | Permalink

    All I can say is my best friend and I drove from Atlanta to Texas to see the reunion tour! We drove around Tx for 3 days like two little girls following our heroes!
    Check out Crunchy Monty’s new band.

  16. Brian had this to say on February 5, 2012 | Permalink

    i caught the Houston show as well in ‘09. Also saw them many times in Cleveland from 1989 thru 1999. was hoping for a reunion disc also w/ Dane and Wally on guitar but that never happened…i was bummed

  17. Jason Goad had this to say on February 8, 2012 | Permalink

    BEST BAND EVER!!! HEAVY RIFFS! INCREDIBLE MELODIES! THOUGHT PROVOKING LYRICS WITH GREAT HOOKS!! Saw em open for Kings X twice. Got to hang out with em. Great guys. Monty is still putting out music in his band Crunchy. Also check out the pre-GC band The Awful Truth on Metal Blade records. REUNION OF GC NEEDED!!!!

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